Several went sea kayaking together during Orientation Adventure, and many took pre-med science classes together. Some played varsity tennis and several studied abroad in the same program in London. And five years ago, on May 13, they all graduated together on Marston Quad.
Today, a group of Sagehens from the Class of 2018 are continuing their shared journey in Boston as Harvard Medical School students. Another has already graduated and is doing a residency at Massachusetts General Hospital, the largest of Harvard鈥檚 teaching affiliates.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 know for sure, but I think this is probably the largest number of students that Pomona has ever had at Harvard Med,鈥 says Sal Daddario 鈥18, who will graduate from what is one of the country鈥檚 most prestigious medical schools next spring. 鈥淲e鈥檙e all doing pretty different things,鈥 he adds鈥"urologic surgery, internal medicine, anesthesia, research, ear, nose and throat surgery鈥攁nd I think we offer a great peek into what a Pomona education can set students up for.鈥
A science major is not required for entrance into medicine, though it was a path all the Pomona alumni now at Harvard pursued. Two earned degrees in neuroscience, two in molecular biology, and one each in biology and chemistry.
From tennis team to medical research
Two of the students were among just 30 who are accepted annually into the medical school鈥檚 research-focused Health Science and Technology (HST) program. Michael Poeschla 鈥18 is in the M.D./Ph.D. program, aiming for a career in biomedical research. He takes classes at both Harvard and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and describes his Ph.D. work as 鈥渟tudying human genetics and how genetic variation affects blood cells and blood cancers.鈥
Maryann Zhao 鈥18, who, like Poeschla, played varsity tennis at Pomona, is also in the HST program. She is currently involved in research at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston, studying head and neck cancers. 鈥淲hat gets me most excited is how this research can potentially make an impact on someone鈥檚 life,鈥 Zhao says. 鈥淚t might even change the type of care they receive. That鈥檚 what motivated me to go into medicine.鈥
Zhao and Julia Foote 鈥18 met on their very first day at Pomona when they moved into the same dorm. They roomed together their senior year and both took two gap years in Boston. They applied to medical school at the same time and both got their Harvard Medical School acceptances on the same day. They will graduate from Harvard鈥攁gain, together鈥攐n May 23.
Zooming into medical school
Like the rest of the HMS entering students in 2020, the Pomona alumni started medical school on Zoom as the pandemic raged. 鈥淏ut at least I knew Sal and Mary and Michael and other Sagehens,鈥 Foote says. She came to Pomona from Jamaica. After graduation she plans to specialize in internal medicine and is interested in healthcare utilization and the cost-effectiveness of treatment and screening strategies.
While Aseal Birir 鈥18 was at Pomona, he was involved in a research project working to develop a breath test to find pneumonia infections. In medical school, he became keenly interested in how drugs are discovered and developed. That led him to Harvard鈥檚 joint M.D./MBA program, which he will complete in May. He plans to pursue a career in biotech after graduation.
Sal Daddario 鈥18 had his first serious introduction to medicine as an 11-year-old when he developed an infectious disease that required hospitalization and multiple surgeries. 鈥淚 remember interacting with my doctors and being in awe of the way they worked鈥攖hey collected information, made decisions, tried new things鈥攁nd then I got better,鈥 he says. As a first-generation college student from a small, rural town in Ohio, he felt embraced by Pomona faculty, several of whom became his 鈥渁cademic parents.鈥 He has 鈥渦sed the skills learned at Pomona in every research endeavor I鈥檝e done here at Harvard,鈥 Daddario adds. 鈥淚 came into college without any of those skills, and I left Pomona ready to immediately engage in clinical research as a valuable member of the team.鈥 He plans to pursue a medical career in pediatric anesthesia.
First into residency
Grant Steele 鈥18 was the first of the Class of 2018 to graduate from Harvard Medical School and is now in a urologic surgery residency at Mass General. He was one of only three who matched into the residency program in 2023. Steele grew up around medicine; his mother is a primary care physician who inspired him with her ability to diagnose and treat even complex medical conditions.
Steele says he loved medical school, 鈥渂eing surrounded by curious and hardworking people, just like at Pomona.鈥 And, he remarks, in Boston, he鈥檚 鈥渋nteracted with fellow Sagehens all the time, both at the medical school and among the other residents at Massachusetts General Hospital. It really is special to look across the drapes in the OR and see a fellow Sagehen smiling back at you.鈥
One of those Sagehens is Samantha 鈥淪ammy鈥 Little 鈥20, a second-year student who is currently attending HMS along with the Class of 2018 alums. 鈥淕rant helped teach anatomy to my M1 class,鈥 Little says, and Daddario 鈥渋s actually my near-peer mentor for the pediatrics rotation at this moment!鈥 Little has found that the people she has met at HMS are 鈥渒ind, supportive and incredibly passionate about a particular aspect of medicine鈥 which, she鈥檚 discovered, 鈥渋s really inspiring energy to be around.鈥
Whatever their plans for life after graduation, the Pomona alumni at Harvard Medical School share a passion for science and a desire to help patients heal. Attending a top medical school while surrounded by people with whom he鈥檚 shared an educational journey for nearly a decade 鈥渉as been absolutely fantastic,鈥 says Daddario. 鈥淲hen I see other Sagehens here at Harvard, I truly feel at home.鈥